Nowadays, consumers make their business talk online. They trust people more than they trust brands. They are more open-minded and lenient on social media when engaging with people rather than companies. That is what the entire concept of employee advocacy hinges on: people trust people, which is why if companies wish to establish genuine connections and relationships with their consumers and potential customers, they have to rely on the credibility of their employees.
People who like and are passionate about your brand and talk about it on social media, for example, have the credibility and authenticity you might lack as the company providing the product or service you’re trying to sell.
Advocate voices will sound much more real and honest to your audience's ears and thus more easily win over your target audience's hearts (and wallets).
That’s why your employees are the perfect people for the job as the actual force driving your company forward. They know you, your brand, your culture, your offer, and the benefits your product or service brings – doesn’t it make sense, then, to formally engage them in an employee advocacy program where you can take advantage of their knowledge and expertise to drive business benefits and amplify your brand?
With their help, you can quickly spread your brand’s story and vision on social media. Your employees have a big incentive to be your advocates —most of the time, employee advocacy is already happening in companies, whether it’s being managed or not.
Let’s start from the beginning. An employee advocacy program is an intentional, structured initiative that brings in other employees from your organization into the recruiting process. Advocates or ambassadors are current employees who can speak authentically about their functional roles and build connections with candidates applying for open roles. They can advocate and vouch for your business, company culture, and talent brand.
The first step in launching an employee advocacy program in your company is finding the right tool. Finding the best platform out there to empower your employees to be the advocates you want them to be is essential, and there are many criteria to evaluate the different options out there and pick the one that caters to your need in the best way possible.
The perfect fit does exist. Even though what makes the ideal fit for you depends on what you want to achieve, there are some must-have features you should be looking out for:
When selecting your advocates to join your employee advocacy program, be sure to ask yourself: “Is this person genuinely excited to connect with candidates?” and “Do they clearly understand the time commitments for this program?” And be sure to articulate clear expectations for the program when you’re recruiting advocates within your company.
One way to go about this could be to send out a general survey to your entire employee base to gauge their attitude and get an idea of what their thoughts are when it comes to becoming a social advocate and taking part in an employee advocacy program. In this phase, it is important to make sure you are giving everyone the opportunity to join the initiative but also select the right people.
Ideally, you want people who are willing to commit to being an ambassador: this means being ready to regularly be active on your employee advocacy platform of choice but also being willing to engage on social media. An important question to ask in this survey is what their level of social media experience is: someone who isn’t very skilled with social media platforms will need training, and you should think about setting up a social media policy for employees before launching the program to give uniform guidelines.
On top of that, don’t forget to explain in detail what the program entails and what it means for them to become ambassadors of the company. To build enthusiasm for the program, it’s always best to highlight the benefits teammates get from participating. Mentorship and leadership opportunities are excellent areas to highlight.
When you want to build an advocate community, it's important to first start with a small-ish group of employees and then gradually increase the number of your seats. The reason is that you can easily keep an eye on how everyone is doing, gauge their response, easily collect feedback from them, and prepare the community to be the best possible for when the rest of your workforce will be invited to join in.
Setting goals and KPIs for a newly built employee advocacy program is a crucial step, which is why our suggestion is to start small with easily attainable goals (onboarding a certain number of ambassadors, for example) and then expand into something bigger as your ambassadors become more and more accustomed to the community and begin to deliver the first actionable results. Think of it as two phases that follow each other: a short-term buzz and a long-term achievement.
The former is the initial onboarding, characterized by a lot of excitement and curiosity for the new tool – which, by consequence, requires smaller, more carefully-planned goals that can easily boost the morale – and the latter is defined by a long-term commitment from your advocates. This entails the creation of a sustainable network of employee ambassadors that will take more effort to build but will guarantee the success of your employee advocacy program.
As for the KPIs, these depend on the goals you set for yourself and your employee advocacy program: it is about more than reach, after all. Suppose your main goal is talent acquisition: your relevant KPIs will then be, for example, the number of applications from referred candidates, the retention rate of new hires, and the number of referrals.
Similarly, if your goal is social selling, you will focus your attention on the number of clicks you get, the number of MQLs and SQLs, and the website traffic.
Once you’ve established your program goals and your advocate group, and you've prepared a small library of challenge ideas for them to participate in, you are ready to launch your community.
Try to think of fun ways to promote this within your company, spread the word about the initiative, make it easy for your employees to want to be your brand ambassadors, and organize your onboarding.
You will find your ambassadors are much more willing and eager to interact with your content when you take the time to customize it. So, try to include a variety of content so that everyone can find something that resonates with them, switch up the requests you make, and try to really turn them into your collaborators.
It goes without saying that without your employees’ support, your advocacy initiative would not go very far. Even with hard-won leadership buy-in, you can’t do much if your employees aren’t willing to pitch in and become your brand ambassadors.
The number one factor that cannot be missing here is trust. A community is not only meant to provide value to you; your advocates will also need things from you. Make it clear to them that they have advantages, show them how they can truly benefit from it, and make sure to listen to their needs and feedback.
Of course, we all know that the ultimate goal of your advocacy initiative is to amplify and grow your brand on social media, but that doesn’t really speak volumes about what your employees get out of being your ambassadors.
What will they get out of it?
Of course, employee advocacy is not all about dropping one request after another to your employees. Companies that constantly push out content and ask employees to share it risk taking social selling and general social sharing too far for their ambassadors. This can often make employees feel like they are only a means to an end — a tool for social media exposure rather than a trusted spokesperson for the company.
That’s why advocacy can mean and be so much more than that. You can look at advocacy as a gateway to ease people into initiatives that, with time, have the power to make employees feel more involved in company life, more appreciated, and ultimately engaged.
One way to have people try their hand at advocacy is by selling it internally as a series of tasks entailed in their roles within the company. Often, employees might already be sharing company-related content online, so asking them to formally log into a platform that organizes and distributes content to share and interact with will not come as a shock to them.
By nurturing the relationship with the ambassadors, their involvement in the company’s employee advocacy program can gradually grow into engagement as people begin to feel that their output and input are appreciated.
With time, you can count on your efforts to yield solid foundations to experiment with more interaction. How? By asking for input rather than output and ultimately empowering them and giving them the tools to contribute to the growth and goals of the organization, which might then spark engagement.
The elements you focus on to grow advocacy in your company — trust, values alignment, recognition, and an emotional connection — are the same elements you focus on when building up and nurturing highly engaged employees.
An instrumental part of engaging employees is recognition. One of the most popular forms of recognition is rewards: we always say that rewards shouldn’t be the driving force behind your employee advocacy program, but they can be an effective source of motivation for bored advocates, for example.
What’s more important, however, is motivating your employees intrinsically, and you can do this by recognizing their efforts. Recognition is a basic human need; by recognizing your employees for the effort they put in to be your ambassador, they will be much more likely and encouraged to go the extra mile for you.
To incentivize advocates even more, Ambassify lets you add a gamification layer with a point system, leaderboards, rewards, and goals.
By introducing a leaderboard, you can make interactions more fun and competitive. The more points you earn, the higher you’ll be in the ranking. Custom leaderboards allow you to rank specific groups of advocates – for example, only people from the Marketing team. It’s an easy and fun way to spark friendly and healthy competition among your peers.
Instead of individual rewards, our goals feature allows you to create competition on a collective basis. This way, you can stimulate social involvement and engagement in your member base. You can set up a time frame, a number of points to attain, a description, etc. But you can add one or multiple objectives to each goal, so you can also set up specific team goals within the community.
Adding rewards means taking your gamification system one step forward. Rewards are a cool incentive for your ambassadors and a nice way for you to spread branded merch, for example, or give your employees a few extras they’ll appreciate.
Here are some ideas for your reward section:
This may sound like something that doesn’t fit in with your company culture, which is fine. Gamification is not essential for your program, and Ambassify allows you to turn the features on or off based on your personal preferences. The important thing is that your community mirrors the company culture and values you ascribe to and encourages your employees to do the same.